Eva Zeisel: The playful search for beauty

31,691 views ・ 2008-12-10

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
So I understand that this meeting was planned,
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and the slogan was From Was to Still.
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And I am illustrating Still.
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Which, of course, I am not agreeing with because,
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although I am 94, I am not still working.
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And anybody who asks me, "Are you still doing this or that?"
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I don't answer because I'm not doing things still, I'm doing it like I always did.
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I still have -- or did I use the word still? I didn't mean that.
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00:52
(Laughter)
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00:56
I have my file which is called To Do. I have my plans.
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01:06
I have my clients. I am doing my work like I always did.
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01:13
So this takes care of my age.
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01:18
I want to show you my work so you know what I am doing and why I am here.
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01:25
This was about 1925.
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All of these things were made during the last 75 years.
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01:39
(Laughter)
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01:41
(Applause)
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01:47
But, of course, I'm working since 25,
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doing more or less what you see here. This is Castleton China.
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01:55
This was an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art.
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02:01
This is now for sale at the Metropolitan Museum.
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02:05
This is still at the Metropolitan Museum now for sale.
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02:11
This is a portrait of my daughter and myself.
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02:16
(Applause)
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02:26
These were just some of the things I've made.
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I made hundreds of them for the last 75 years.
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02:35
I call myself a maker of things.
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02:39
I don't call myself an industrial designer because I'm other things.
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02:47
Industrial designers want to make novel things.
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02:52
Novelty is a concept of commerce, not an aesthetic concept.
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03:01
The industrial design magazine, I believe, is called "Innovation."
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03:09
Innovation is not part of the aim of my work.
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03:19
Well, makers of things: they make things more beautiful, more elegant,
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more comfortable than just the craftsmen do.
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03:32
I have so much to say. I have to think what I am going to say.
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03:37
Well, to describe our profession otherwise,
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we are actually concerned with the playful search for beauty.
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That means the playful search for beauty was called the first activity of Man.
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03:57
Sarah Smith, who was a mathematics professor at MIT, wrote,
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"The playful search for beauty was Man's first activity --
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that all useful qualities and all material qualities
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were developed from the playful search for beauty."
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04:22
These are tiles. The word, "playful" is a necessary aspect of our work
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because, actually, one of our problems is that we have to make,
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produce, lovely things throughout all of life, and this for me is now 75 years.
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04:51
So how can you, without drying up,
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make things with the same pleasure, as a gift to others, for so long?
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The playful is therefore an important part of our quality as designer.
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05:16
Let me tell you some about my life.
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As I said, I started to do these things 75 years ago.
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My first exhibition in the United States
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was at the Sesquicentennial exhibition in 1926 --
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that the Hungarian government sent one of my hand-drawn pieces as part of the exhibit.
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My work actually took me through many countries,
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and showed me a great part of the world.
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06:08
This is not that they took me -- the work didn't take me --
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I made the things particularly because I wanted to use them to see the world.
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06:20
I was incredibly curious to see the world, and I made all these things,
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which then finally did take me to see many countries and many cultures.
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06:35
I started as an apprentice to a Hungarian craftsman,
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and this taught me what the guild system was in Middle Ages.
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The guild system: that means when I was an apprentice,
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I had to apprentice myself in order to become a pottery master.
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In my shop where I studied, or learned, there was a traditional hierarchy
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of master, journeyman and learned worker, and apprentice,
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and I worked as the apprentice.
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The work as an apprentice was very primitive.
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That means I had to actually learn every aspect of making pottery by hand.
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We mashed the clay with our feet when it came from the hillside.
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After that, it had to be kneaded. It had to then go in, kind of, a mangle.
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And then finally it was prepared for the throwing.
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And there I really worked as an apprentice.
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My master took me to set ovens
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because this was part of oven-making, oven-setting, in the time.
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And finally, I had received a document
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that I had accomplished my apprenticeship successfully,
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that I had behaved morally, and this document was given to me
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by the Guild of Roof-Coverers, Rail-Diggers, Oven-Setters,
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Chimney Sweeps and Potters.
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09:01
(Laughter)
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I also got at the time a workbook which explained my rights
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and my working conditions, and I still have that workbook.
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09:16
First I set up a shop in my own garden,
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and made pottery which I sold on the marketplace in Budapest.
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And there I was sitting, and my then-boyfriend --
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I didn't mean it was a boyfriend like it is meant today --
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but my boyfriend and I sat at the market and sold the pots.
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My mother thought that this was not very proper,
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so she sat with us to add propriety to this activity.
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09:55
(Laughter)
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However, after a while there was a new factory being built in Budapest,
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a pottery factory, a large one.
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And I visited it with several ladies, and asked all sorts of questions of the director.
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Then the director asked me, why do you ask all these questions?
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I said, I also have a pottery.
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10:22
So he asked me, could he please visit me, and then finally he did,
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and explained to me that what I did now in my shop was an anachronism,
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that the industrial revolution had broken out,
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and that I rather should join the factory.
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There he made an art department for me where I worked for several months.
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10:45
However, everybody in the factory spent his time at the art department.
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10:53
The director there said there were several women casting
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and producing my designs now in molds, and this was sold also to America.
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11:10
I remember that it was quite successful.
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However, the director, the chemist, model maker -- everybody --
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concerned himself much more with the art department --
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that means, with my work -- than making toilets,
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so finally they got a letter from the center, from the bank who owned the factory,
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saying, make toilet-setting behind the art department, and that was my end.
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So this gave me the possibility because now I was a journeyman,
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and journeymen also take their satchel and go to see the world.
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So as a journeyman, I put an ad into the paper that I had studied,
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that I was a down-to-earth potter's journeyman
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and I was looking for a job as a journeyman.
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And I got several answers, and I accepted the one
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which was farthest from home and practically, I thought, halfway to America.
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And that was in Hamburg.
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Then I first took this job in Hamburg, at an art pottery
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where everything was done on the wheel,
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and so I worked in a shop where there were several potters.
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And the first day, I was coming to take my place at the turntable --
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there were three or four turntables -- and one of them, behind where I was sitting,
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was a hunchback, a deaf-mute hunchback, who smelled very bad.
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So I doused him in cologne every day, which he thought was very nice,
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and therefore he brought bread and butter every day,
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which I had to eat out of courtesy.
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13:19
The first day I came to work in this shop
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there was on my wheel a surprise for me.
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My colleagues had thoughtfully put on the wheel where I was supposed to work
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a very nicely modeled natural man's organs.
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13:48
(Laughter)
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After I brushed them off with a hand motion, they were very --
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I finally was now accepted, and worked there for some six months.
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This was my first job.
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If I go on like this, you will be here till midnight.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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So I will try speed it up a little
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(Laughter)
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14:26
Moderator: Eva, we have about five minutes.
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(Laughter)
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Eva Zeisel: Are you sure?
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Moderator: Yes, I am sure.
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EZ: Well, if you are sure,
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I have to tell you that within five minutes I will talk very fast.
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And actually, my work took me to many countries
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because I used my work to fill my curiosity.
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And among other things, other countries I worked, was in the Soviet Union,
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where I worked from '32 to '37 -- actually, to '36.
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I was finally there, although I had nothing to do -- I was a foreign expert.
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I became art director of the china and glass industry,
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and eventually under Stalin's purges -- at the beginning of Stalin's purges,
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I didn't know that hundreds of thousands of innocent people were arrested.
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So I was arrested quite early in Stalin's purges,
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and spent 16 months in a Russian prison.
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The accusation was that I had successfully prepared an Attentat on Stalin's life.
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This was a very dangerous accusation.
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And if this is the end of my five minutes, I want to tell you that
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I actually did survive, which was a surprise.
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But since I survived and I'm here,
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and since this is the end of the five minutes, I will --
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Moderator: Tell me when your last trip to Russia was.
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Weren't you there recently?
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EZ: Oh, this summer, in fact,
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the Lomonosov factory was bought by an American company, invited me.
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They found out that I had worked in '33 at this factory,
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and they came to my studio in Rockland County,
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and brought the 15 of their artists to visit me here.
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And they invited myself to come to the Russian factory last summer,
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in July, to make some dishes, design some dishes.
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And since I don't like to travel alone, they also invited my daughter,
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son-in-law and granddaughter,
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so we had a lovely trip to see Russia today,
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which is not a very pleasant and happy view.
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Here I am now, if this is the end? Thank you.
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(Applause)
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